4.1 Article

Thermal and athermal contributions to the flow stress of martensite

Journal

MATERIALIA
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.mtla.2020.100719

Keywords

Martensite; Tempered martensite; Bauschinger test; Strain-rate sensitivity; Athermal hardening; Kinematic hardening

Funding

  1. ArcelorMittal
  2. Australian Research Council [LP150100756]
  3. Australian Government Research Training Program
  4. Australian Research Council [LP150100756] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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Recent theories consider as-quenched martensite as a composite which strain hardens by the gradual yielding of constituents. An underlying hypothesis is that hardening comes primarily from athermal hardening contributions. In this contribution, we conducted strain-rate jump and tension-compression tests to quantify the athermal and kinematic hardening contributions in martensite. It is shown that athermal hardening accounts for similar to 75% of the total strength of as-quenched martensite. The magnitudes of athermal and kinematic hardening decrease as a function of tempering. A correlation between the athermal and kinematic hardening contributions is identified and shown to be independent of the chemistry and tempering conditions examined in this work.

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